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The targeted killing judgment of the Israeli Supreme Court and the critique of legal violence

Author

Summary, in English

The targeted killing judgment of the Israeli Supreme Court has, since it was handed down in December 2006, received a significant amount of attention: praise as well as criticism. Offering neither praise nor criticism, the present article is instead an attempt at a ‘critique’ of the judgment drawing on the German-Jewish philosopher Walter Benjamin’s famous essay from 1921, ‘Critique of Violence’. The article focuses on a key aspect of Benjamin’s critique: the distinction between the two modalities of ‘legal violence’—lawmaking or foundational violence and law-preserving or administrative violence. Analysing the fact that the Court exercises jurisdiction over these killings in the first place, the decision on the applicable law as well as the interpretation of that law, the article finds that the targeted killing judgment collapses this distinction in a different way from that foreseen by Benjamin. Hence, the article argues, the targeted killing judgment is best understood as a form of administrative foundational violence. In conclusion Judith Butler’s reading of Benjamin’s notion of ‘divine violence’ is considered, particularly his use of the commandment, ‘thou shalt not kill’, as a non-violent violence that must be waged against the kind of legal violence of which the targeted killing judgment is exemplary.

Publishing year

2012

Language

English

Pages

67-82

Publication/Series

Law and Critique

Volume

23

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Springer

Topic

  • Law

Keywords

  • folkrätt
  • targeted killing
  • Israeli Supreme Court
  • Legal violence
  • Divine violence
  • Critique of violence
  • Judith Butler
  • Aharon Barak
  • Walter Benjamin
  • public international law
  • rättsvetenskap
  • law

Status

Published

Research group

  • Public International Law

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0957-8536